Abstract
Annual Review of Biophysics and Biomolecular Structure
Vol. 33:
177-198
(Volume publication date June 2004)
(doi:10.1146/annurev.biophys.33.110502.132647)
First published online as a Review in Advance on January 7, 2004MOLECULES OF THE BACTERIAL CYTOSKELETON ▪ Abstract The structural elucidation of clear but distant homologs of actin and tubulin in bacteria and GFP labeling of these proteins promises to reinvigorate the field of prokaryotic cell biology. FtsZ (the tubulin homolog) and MreB/ParM (the actin homologs) are indispensable for cellular tasks that require the cell to accurately position molecules, similar to the function of the eukaryotic cytoskeleton. FtsZ is the organizing molecule of bacterial cell division and forms a filamentous ring around the middle of the cell. Many molecules, including MinCDE, SulA, ZipA, and FtsA, assist with this process directly. Recently, genes much more similar to tubulin than to FtsZ have been identified in Verrucomicrobia. MreB forms helices underneath the inner membrane and probably defines the shape of the cell by positioning transmembrane and periplasmic cell wall–synthesizing enzymes. Currently, no interacting proteins are known for MreB and its relatives that help these proteins polymerize or depolymerize at certain times and places inside the cell. It is anticipated that MreB-interacting proteins exist in analogy to the large number of actin binding proteins in eukaryotes. ParM (a plasmid-borne actin homolog) is directly involved in pushing certain single-copy plasmids to the opposite poles by ParR/parC-assisted polymerization into double-helical filaments, much like the filaments formed by actin, F-actin. Mollicutes seem to have developed special systems for cell shape determination and motility, such as the fibril protein in Spiroplasma. Most recent citing papers (via CrossRef)Ignicoccus hospitalis and Nanoarchaeum equitans: ultrastructure, cell–cell interaction, and 3D reconstruction from serial sections of freeze-substituted cells and by electron cryotomography Archives of Microbiology 190(3):395-408 (2008) Effect of short‐range forces on the length distribution of fibrous cytoskeletal proteins Biopolymers 89(9):711-721 (2008)  Toward a Biomechanical Understanding of Whole Bacterial Cells Annual Review of Biochemistry 77:583-613 (2008) The SsgA-like proteins in actinomycetes: small proteins up to a big task Antonie van Leeuwenhoek 94(1):85-97 (2008) Cell evolution and the problem of membrane topology Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 8(12):1018-1024 (2008)
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